i always thought that Alien VS Predator was kind of a mountain of madness adaptation. You have elder things (predators) putting a slave race of shoggoth (aliens) who eventually overthrow them, and a temple with lots of carvings.

i always thought that Alien VS Predator was kind of a mountain of madness adaptation. You have elder things (predators) putting a slave race of shoggoth (aliens) who eventually overthrow them, and a temple with lots of carvings.

One of my first rant videos (before it was called Cthutube) was about that!

Is anyone familiar with the Piri Reis map? Or perhaps I should say, the 'mystery' of the Piri Reis map- http://historicmysteries.com/the-piri-reis-map The short of it is that this is a map that was discovered at the beginning of the last century, but dated to the early 15th century, credited to a Turkish captain named Piri Reis. Besides supposedly depicting geographical detail that should not have existed at that point, of various coastlines, it also depicted parts of Antarctica in incredible detail, but more importantly, detail of Antarctica as it appears without the layers of ice that rests on it. Apparently, the majority of the map's detail derives from other, pre-existing maps; some of which are said to pre-date Christ. Which begs the question; at that early date who could have had the ability to depict with such accuracy geography that most people of the time wouldn't even know existed?

Every time I hear of Antarctica (such as with this story) I think of this map. No doubt there's some logical explanation, but it's still fun to speculate

Quote

From the site- What is baffling is not so much how Piri Reis managed to draw such an accurate map of the Antarctic region 300 years before it was discovered – but that the map depicts the coastline under ice! Evidence confirms that the latest date Queen Maud Land could have been charted in an ice-free state is 4000 BC.

Is anyone familiar with the Piri Reis map? Or perhaps I should say, the 'mystery' of the Piri Reis map- http://historicmysteries.com/the-piri-reis-map The short of it is that this is a map that was discovered at the beginning of the last century, but dated to the early 15th century, credited to a Turkish captain named Piri Reis. Besides supposedly depicting geographical detail that should not have existed at that point, of various coastlines, it also depicted parts of Antarctica in incredible detail, but more importantly, detail of Antarctica as it appears without the layers of ice that rests on it. Apparently, the majority of the map's detail derives from other, pre-existing maps; some of which are said to pre-date Christ. Which begs the question; at that early date who could have had the ability to depict with such accuracy geography that most people of the time wouldn't even know existed?

Every time I hear of Antarctica (such as with this story) I think of this map. No doubt there's some logical explanation, but it's still fun to speculate

Quote

From the site- What is baffling is not so much how Piri Reis managed to draw such an accurate map of the Antarctic region 300 years before it was discovered – but that the map depicts the coastline under ice! Evidence confirms that the latest date Queen Maud Land could have been charted in an ice-free state is 4000 BC.

Just idling away the time until the next episode

Looking around, the consensus seems to be that Reis either ran out of room for South America:

I thought that I should post something from H.P Lovecraft the Band....At The Mountains Of MadnessAll along there is love we need All you are we have You have lost all sense of touch In the dark without a crutch You've arrived at the Mountains of Madness

Time has come, you're standing all alone Plastic god, listen to the drone Synthesized electric sound Trembling from underground You've arrived at the Mountains of Madness

Don't believe that it's a game Games like this, my friend, will make you go insane Listen to the sounds, hear them all around

Standing there, wind blowing through your hair Eyes on fire, colour everywhere When you gaze into the sky All alone with no disguise You've survived at the Mountains of Madness You've survived at the Mountains of Madness

Unlike other songs this seems to have nothing to do with the story. The band It's self did not have a hole lot to do with H.P.L other then there manger liked hime and said that it would be a cool name. (I to like the name Lovecraft. It means so much if you look at it. Love and Craft!) Will post more soon!

I still think John W. Campbell's Who Goes There? (famously adapted as The Thing from Another World in the '50s and by John Carpenter as The Thing in '82) was written as a response to At the Mountains of Madness.

I still think John W. Campbell's Who Goes There? (famously adapted as The Thing from Another World in the '50s and by John Carpenter as The Thing in '82) was written as a response to At the Mountains of Madness.

Man! This is MY favorite of HPL's stories...so chocked full of geological/paleontological goodness!

It's funny, but in this episode, Chris says that geology students should read this story...well, actually, I'm a geologist, and I have my undergrads read "At the Mountains of Madness" in my Historical Geology course. The course is taught in the Fall (usually), and I generally give them the story as a fun assignment over Halloween; we have a pretty neat discussion afterwords, and I usually use it as a lead-in to a discussion of nifty concepts and geological uses of ichnofossils (= tracks, trails, burrows, etc of organisms preserved in the stratigraphic record). Some of the geology is wrong, even at the time when Lovecraft was writing, but still! Neat stuff! And heck, he even has some Wegener and "Continental Drift" thrown in there, when the whole idea was generally rejected by American geologists! It's great!